7 Ways To Interact With Audience In An In-Person Presentation

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 28 авг 2024

Комментарии • 22

  • @vbrekk
    @vbrekk 2 года назад +1

    Wonderful ideas, thanks for these tips. Now I want popcorn 🍿 !!

  • @biancapeel68
    @biancapeel68 2 года назад +1

    AS always so useful! Thank you

  • @mariogalvez4919
    @mariogalvez4919 2 года назад +1

    Excellent ideas for in-person group presentations. I enjoy watching and learning from your RUclips videos. Thank you.

    • @chad.littlefield
      @chad.littlefield  2 года назад

      Thanks for sharing, Mario! Glad you took away some gems. Every Tuesday at 7:00am, a new video is released :-)

  • @whithall1219
    @whithall1219 Год назад +1

    Great video!! Thanks for making meetings impactful

    • @chad.littlefield
      @chad.littlefield  Год назад +1

      Absolutely, Whitney! Thanks for caring enough about your meetings to find and check out a video like this! Greatly appreciated 😊

  • @LariLaraEarrings1
    @LariLaraEarrings1 2 года назад +1

    Great content and great way to deliver your content, my first time here and coming back! Thank you!

    • @chad.littlefield
      @chad.littlefield  2 года назад

      Welcome, Juan! Very glad you discovered the channel. I'm pretty intentional about responding to questions in the comments, so always feel welcome to ask away 😊

  • @daveclose8671
    @daveclose8671 2 года назад +1

    Always super helpful and insightful. Always have at least (if not more) one concrete take away every time I watch one of your videos. Thank you for consistently sharing your ideas and techniques! I am trying to deliberately incorporate what I learn in meetings I lead!

    • @chad.littlefield
      @chad.littlefield  2 года назад

      Thanks for sharing, Dave! Glad to know there is always something you leave with. I try to plan/record/post videos that I would, myself, enjoy and benefit from watching 👍👍

  • @SilipaVakaloloma-id6iu
    @SilipaVakaloloma-id6iu Год назад

    Thank you so much Chad that was interested

  • @shawnmoriarty8223
    @shawnmoriarty8223 2 года назад +1

    Always good nuggets and insights. Thank you Chad.

    • @chad.littlefield
      @chad.littlefield  2 года назад

      Thank YOU, Shawn. Love continuing to see you show up here.

  • @gracenemo2845
    @gracenemo2845 Год назад +1

    Hi Chad, The framing exercise as you told was not covered at the end of the video. I have a topic to speak on Assertiveness (15mins), and have to make it interactive. I have prepared my ppt, but its not interactive. How to engage, and keep to just one topic, instead of covering all styles and techniques.

    • @chad.littlefield
      @chad.littlefield  Год назад

      Hey there, I'm not 100% sure what you are asking here, but if you are looking to make your presentation and PowerPoint more interactive, this video will be a perfect fit: ruclips.net/video/nWvCvnOZNn4/видео.html

  • @tatiana.rodriguez
    @tatiana.rodriguez 2 года назад +1

    Another insightful and energizing video. Thank you! Quick clarification: the activity where you asked people to raise and spin their thumbs- can you say more about it please. I didn’t catch what happened that cause their perspective shift and I’m very curious. Thanks Chad!

    • @tatiana.rodriguez
      @tatiana.rodriguez 2 года назад +1

      I rewatched it, did the finger spinning clockwise myself & realized that after you asked people to look down, their finger must’ve been spinning in another direction. When I tried it, mine was still spinning clockwise 🤔 so perhaps I’m an oddball but I do appreciate these movement centered activities! 😀

    • @chad.littlefield
      @chad.littlefield  2 года назад

      @@tatiana.rodriguez hmmm...if you repeat exactly what is in the video (standing helps), your finger won't change direction. But your perspective of looking from below it to above it makes it appear that you went from clockwise to counterclockwise.

  • @abrahamarciga3334
    @abrahamarciga3334 Год назад

    New senerio: how to deal with difficult close-minded people who dominate a conversation with the intent to win the conversation?